Abstract

Temozolomide, a DNA methylating drug, is currently being used first-line in glioblastoma therapy. Although the mode of action of this so-called SN1 alkylating agent is well described, including the types of induced DNA damage triggering the DNA damage response and survival and death pathways, some researchers expressed doubt that data mostly obtained by in vitro models can be translated into the in vivo situation. In experimental settings, high doses of the agent are often used, which are likely to activate responses triggered by base N-alkylations instead of O6-methylguanine (O6MeG), which is the primary cytotoxic lesion induced by low doses of temozolomide and other methylating drugs in O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) repair incompetent cells. However, numerous studies provided compelling evidence that O6MeG is not only a mutagenic, but also a powerful toxic lesion inducing DNA double-strand breaks, apoptosis, autophagy and cellular senescence. MGMT, repairing the lesion through methyl group transfer, is a key node in protecting cells against all these effects and has a significant impact on patient’s survival following temozolomide therapy, supporting the notion that findings obtained on a molecular and cellular level can be translated to the therapeutic setting in vivo. This comment summarizes the current knowledge on O6MeG-triggered pathways, including dose dependence and the question of thresholds, and comes up with the conclusion that data obtained on cell lines using low dose protocols are relevant and apoptosis, autophagy and senescence are therapeutically important endpoints.

Highlights

  • Temozolomide, a DNA methylating drug, is currently being used first-line in glioblastoma therapy

  • In a recent review in Biomedicines, Strobel et al discussed the mode of action of temozolomide, which is being used first-line in glioblastoma therapy [1]

  • Biomedicines 2019, 7, 90 was further concluded that “TMZ should be considered primarily cytostatic and senescence-inducing and not cytotoxic and apoptosis-inducing, potentially preventing cancer cells from G2 to M phase transition when tumor cells are most sensitive for mitotic cell death.” [1]

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Summary

Introduction

Temozolomide, a DNA methylating drug, is currently being used first-line in glioblastoma therapy. There is solid data to show that TMZ and other SN 1 methylating agents induce cell death by apoptosis [6,7], and the pathways activated by the critical lesion O6 -methylguanine (O6 MeG) It has been shown that TMZ induces autophagy and cellular senescence, which are important responses triggered by the O6 MeG lesion [13,14].

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